▲ | awesome_dude 6 days ago | |||||||
> They're fundamentally the same type of knowledge. They can be represented by the same data structures. Maybe, maybe one is based on correlation, the other causation. | ||||||||
▲ | quantummagic 6 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
What if the causation had simply been that he enjoyed cereal for breakfast? In either case, the results are the same, he's eating cereal for breakfast. We can know this fact without knowing the underlying cause. Many times, we don't even know the cause of things we choose to do for ourselves, let alone what others do. On top of which, even if you think the "cause" is that the doctor told him to eat a healthy diet, do you really know the actual cause? Maybe the real cause, is that the girl he fancies, told him he's not in good enough shape. The doctor telling him how to get in shape is only a correlation, the real cause is his desire to win the girl. These connections are vast and deep, but they're all essentially the same type of knowledge, representable by the same data structures. | ||||||||
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